Coal bed formation in Antarctica is possible through the accumulation and burial of plant material in swamps during ancient warm periods in the Earth's history. Over millions of years, the plant material undergoes compaction and chemical changes, forming peat and eventually coal. Antarctica has a history of relatively warm climates in the past, allowing for the formation of these coal beds that we see today.
The leading theory for the formation of fossil fuels is that they were formed from the remains of ancient plants and animals buried deep underground over millions of years. The heat and pressure from the Earth's crust caused these organic materials to decompose and transform into coal, oil, and natural gas.
organic matter
The Tethys Sea was the body of water that separated the ancient supercontinents of Laurasia and Gondwanaland. It played a significant role in the geological history of Earth by influencing the movement of tectonic plates and the formation of mountain ranges.
The movement of air can both result in cloud formation and inhibit cloud formation. When warm, moist air rises and cools, it can condense to form clouds. On the other hand, strong winds can disperse clouds and prevent them from forming by disrupting the necessary vertical motion of air.
Phalanx Formation
the battle formation that ancient Greece used was called the phalanx formation.
A huge formation used in ancient Greece and later in Rome.
A massed fighting formation of armoured infantry.
protection
ottoman empire
Phalanx
the Phalanx
Several tribes of ancient Israel, Rome, Greece, probably others.
Phalanx
A Phalanx Formation.
mountainous topography